William Parcher
Show me the monkey!
- Joined
- Jul 26, 2005
- Messages
- 27,487
The only mystery is the name of the cat. Precious? Snuggles? Sweet Pea?
The only mystery is the name of the cat. Precious? Snuggles? Sweet Pea?
In June, a family walking in a forest in central Florida spotted this raccoon hitching a ride on the back of an alligator.
Mr Richard Jones told local television station WFTV that he "snapped a lucky picture right when the gator slipped into the water and before the raccoon jumped off and scurried away".
Okay, sure, that's it.I saw what I initially thought was a dark-colored German shepherd trotting towards the highway at the edge of our headlight beams off the right side of the road. As we drew closer, I saw that it wasn’t a dog at all, but a large cat. It had slightly rounded ears, a flatter face than a canine, a sleek body that was fairly low to the ground, and a long, flowing tail behind it. It wasn’t quite black, as I could see the tip of the tail and the tips of its ears were darker than the fur on the rest of the body. It was now well-illuminated, and it was clear that I was looking at a charcoal-colored mountain lion of some sort. The legs looked a bit shorter than other mountain lions I have seen, but that could have been due to the way it was trotting at the time . . . . If the States admitted that these cats (or regular cougars, for that matter) had a viable population in their on their land, they would be mandated to put together a management plan for them costing thousands and thousands of dollars. It’s easier to ignore them and let them manage themselves… like bigfoots.
I'd say probably not.What I saw can probably best be described as a melanistic mountain lion . . .
It doesn't take special skills necessarily to talk out of your ass the way he regularly does, but it does take a special lack of conscience to defend it as real life in the face of overwhelming evidence that it isn't even close. The simple fact is character counts even when one pretends it doesn't. After his present gravy train is over he should be minus one reputation, but most Bigfooters aren't smart enough to know that. He did learn from one of the best con-men around, so who knows.Bigfoot not enough for Ole Cliffy.
http://cliffbarackman.com/black-panther-in-west-virgina/
Okay, sure, that's it.
I'd say probably not.
There are some really interesting cryptids down in the rabbit hole.Barackman said:What I saw can probably best be described as a melanistic mountain lion...
You mean one of the gray cougars living in West Virginia?
Was that before or after you saw the flying amoeba?I watched a tan big cat chase a deer and bring it down, it looked like a cougar to me.
I watched a tan big cat chase a deer and bring it down, it looked like a cougar to me. One of my co-worker's brought a game cam pic of a cougar to work. They aren't extinct here despite what the official word is on their status.
Cougars will have spots up until they are about a year old, what Cliff is describing sounds like a young gray cougar to me. It might have looked black at night. I don't have any reason to think he would be lying or would have misidentified what he says he saw.
I watched a tan big cat chase a deer and bring it down, it looked like a cougar to me. One of my co-worker's brought a game cam pic of a cougar to work. They aren't extinct here despite what the official word is on their status.
LOLOL......obviously they don't know alligators in Great Britain.
Was this on TV or YouTube or are you actually claiming that you observed a cougar kill a deer . . . in South Carolina?I watched a tan big cat chase a deer and bring it down, it looked like a cougar to me.